Seward v. Fisken

210 P. 378, 122 Wash. 225, 27 A.L.R. 1208, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 1131
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1922
DocketNo. 17047
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 210 P. 378 (Seward v. Fisken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seward v. Fisken, 210 P. 378, 122 Wash. 225, 27 A.L.R. 1208, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 1131 (Wash. 1922).

Opinion

Main, J.

— This action, as originally instituted, was one to recover a money judgment against Archibald J. Fisken, who was the only defendant named in the complaint. When Fisken answered, he filed a cross-complaint and caused the county of King and its treasurer to be made parties. By the cross-complaint, it was sought to restrain the county and the treasurer from asserting that the taxes upon specified real property for a certain year had not been paid. After the cross-complaint was filed, the original complaint, by stipulation, was amended to ask for the same relief as that sought in the cross-complaint. The county and its treasurer demurred to the cross-complaint, which demurrer was overruled. They elected to stand upon the demurrer, and judgment was entered as prayed for. From this judgment, the county and its treasurer appeal. The facts are not in dispute and will be here sufficiently set forth to present the controlling question.

In June, 1919, the respondent Fisken, as agent for the Mortgage Bond Company of New York, procured from this company for respondent Mae Seward a loan of $3,000, to be secured by mortgage upon lots ten (10) and eleven (11), block one (1), of Densmore’s Summit Addition to the City of Seattle. When Mrs. Seward applied for this loan, she did not own this property, but was about to purchase it from Albert A. B-utledge and wife, to whom the Mortgage Bond Company of New York had previously made a loan of [227]*227$2,500, secured by a mortgage upon tbe same property. In addition to tbe Rutledge mortgage, there were outstanding at tbe time general taxes for tbe last half of tbe year 1917, and all of tbe year 1918. In consummating tbe transaction, a deed was taken by Mrs. Seward from tbe Rutledges, and a mortgage given by her to tbe Mortgage Bond Company of New York for tbe sum of $3,000, she instructing Fisken to apply the proceeds of tbe loan, $2,407.54, to tbe extinguishment of tbe Rutledge mortgage, and tbe balance of $592.46 upon tbe purchase price to tbe Rutledges, tbe latter not to be paid until Fisken was satisfied that tbe taxes bad been paid. One Mark Munson acted for tbe Rutledges in tbe transaction. Fisken paid tbe Rutledge mortgage as instructed, and when Munson exhibited to him a receipt from tbe county treasurer showing that tbe taxes bad been paid, the $592.46 was paid over to him. Munson bad given bis check to tbe county treasurer in payment of tbe taxes at tbe time tbe receipt was issued. When tbe check was presented, payment was refused for want of sufficient funds. At tbe time tbe check was accepted by tbe county treasurer, be made a notation upon tbe tax rolls that tbe taxes bad been paid, and this notation remained thereon for a period of approximately thirty days, when it was canceled. Thereafter, Mrs. Seward brought this action against Fisken to recover tbe amount of these taxes, and, as above stated, when be answered and filed a cross-complaint, tbe cause was resolved in effect to one by Mrs. Seward and Fisken against tbe county and its treasurer, seeking to restrain them from asserting that the taxes had not been paid, and quieting tbe title of Mrs. Seward to tbe property above described as though tbe taxes bad in fact been paid.

A few preliminary statements will tend to simplify tbe discussion upon tbe controlling question in tbe [228]*228case. It must be remembered that this is not a com troversy between the person paying the taxes, and the county, but is one by an innocent third person, Mrs. Seward, who purchased the property and paid over a portion of the purchase price sufficient to pay the tax, in reliance upon a receipt exhibited to her agent which had been issued by the county treasurer showing that the taxes had been paid. The act of the county treasurer in issuing the receipt was not one where power was entirely lacking, but was the exercise of an existing power in a defective or irregular manner. Under this statute, Rem. Comp. Stat., § 11254, the county treasurer, upon the payment of any tax, is required to give a receipt therefor and enter the same upon the tax roll. The general rule is that a cheek given in payment of taxes does not operate to discharge the tax unless the check be in fact paid. The county, acting through its treasurer in collecting taxes, acts in a governmental and not in a proprietary capacity. The question, then, is reduced to this: Will the county be estopped from asserting that a tax has been paid, as against a complaining party who has purchased the property covered by the tax and paid over the purchase money, or a portion of it, to the seller in reliance upon a receipt exhibited, signed by the county treasurer, showing that the taxes have been paid?

Upon this question there is a dearth of authority. So far as we are advised, it has been before the courts upon only two or three occasions and is little discussed by the text writers. In Curnen v. Mayor etc., 79 N. Y. 511, the action was to compel the defendant to discharge a lot in the city of New York belonging to the plaintiff from the lien of certain assessments. It appeared that, before the plaintiff paid the purchase [229]*229price, she ascertained at the proper office from the official records that the assessments had been paid. Plaintiff thereupon, after deducting certain assessments which appeared as paid upon the records, paid the balance of the purchase price for the property. The assessments were in fact paid at the time stated by a person not owning the property, through a mistake. This party, after discovering his mistake, brought an action-and recovered the amount of money thus paid. The plaintiff, or the purchaser of the property, who had relied upon the records, was not a party to that action. After the person paying the taxes had prevailed in the action brought by him, the entry of payment was cancelled. Thereafter, the plaintiff, who was the purchaser, brought action to restrain the defendant from asserting as against her that the taxes had not been paid, and it was there held that she was entitled to the relief sought, since, being a bona fide purchaser of the property and in making the purchase relied upon the records showing that the assessments had been paid, the defendant would be estopped from asserting that they had not been paid. It was there said:

“The record is for the public; with the book no one but its owner has concern, and of itself, it avails nothing; there is, therefore, no analogy in the modes of treatment to which they may be subjected. The assessment-roll is akin to a judgment; both records, and each creating a lien to be enforced by subsequent proceedings, if the debt or duty is not otherwise discharged. (Mayor, etc., v. Colgate, supra.) If the latter is erroneously discharged, its lien cannot be restored so as to affect bona fide purchasers, or others standing in a similar relation, whose transactions were entered into in ignorance of the error, and in reliance upon the truth of the record. (King v. Harris, 34 N. Y. 330.) The same rule applies here. There [230]*230can be no doubt tbat tbe plaintiff was led by tbe entry upon the roll to believe that tbe assessments bad been paid, and if they are enforced now, it will be'to her prejudice.”

It is sought to distinguish tbat case because there tbe taxes were paid, not by check, but in money. This is true, but tbe money was paid over under a mistake of fact.

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Bluebook (online)
210 P. 378, 122 Wash. 225, 27 A.L.R. 1208, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 1131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seward-v-fisken-wash-1922.